Best movies of the decade

Looking back on a decade dominated by the movie franchise — Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter, Star Wars, and Spider-Man to name just a few — and overrun with prequels and sequels (Saw I, Saw II, Saw III, Saw...), our film critics pick their favorites of the '00s. Who's ready for There Will Be Blood II: Revenge of the Milkshake?

Dogville (Lars von Trier, 2004): For all its filmic, literary, and historical echoes, von Trier's fierce jeremiad was immediately recognizable as something new — a work of sustained cinematic chutzpah, a testament to the power of the imagination, and a morality play that also concerns the moral responsibility of image making. J. Hoberman

Mulholland Dr. (David Lynch, 2001): Comic, sexy, surreal, self-reflexive, thrilling, and ludicrous by turns, Lynch's exploration of the Hollywood dream factory was almost as much fun to write about as to watch — a voluptuous phantasmagoria with a two-part structure that suggests Buster Keaton's Sherlock Jr. reversed so that the dream comes first. J. Hoberman

A History of Violence (David Cronenberg, 2005): Consummate filmmaking, Cronenberg's bleakly humorous, highly artful, deviously topical vigilante thriller is what used to be called a B movie — electrified by lightning. Together with Spider and Eastern Promises, it confirms Cronenberg's status as the great narrative filmmaker of the '00s. J. Hoberman

The Devil Wears Prada (David Frankel, 2006): Mainstream as a mall and now a cable staple on par with Seinfeld reruns, which does nothing to diminish the accomplishment of wringing from a petulant best seller the most delightfully wrenching movie about the workplace since, oh, last decade's Office Space. Beneath its glamtastic façade (fashion! parties! champagne!) lurked a villain who was, in truth, the hero; a protagonist in need of antagonizing; and sage advice from Stanley Tucci, who should always star in Meryl Streep movies. Robert Wilonsky

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (Michel Gondry, 2004): In a decade populated by beloved head-scratchers (Memento, Mulholland Dr., etc.), this was the sole heartbreaker of the bunch. You could feel its ache; even now, it still stings upon repeated viewings, which are necessary to untangle the before, during, and after of a love affair no amnesia could erase from the souls of two characters destined to come together and fall apart. Robert Wilonsky

Unbreakable (M. Night Shyamalan, 2000): Years later, superhero movies got good and glossy (Iron Man, aces) and down and dirty (The Dark Knight, suckin' in the '70s), but the first offering of the decade remains the best (ever?). Maybe that's because it's the most human of the lot, the spandex-free story of a maritally challenged palooka reluctantly recruited into the crime-fighting business by — surprise! — the coldest, creepiest villain never to appear in the pages of a comic book. It's Shyamalan's best film — no screwy twist, only devastating revelation. Robert Wilonsky

The Wind Will Carry Us (Abbas Kiarostami, 2000): Screened in festivals in 1999 but not released in the United States until the following year, this fin de siècle/millennium fable by the great Iranian auteur seemed to anticipate many of the dramatic changes that would sweep through filmmaking over the decade to come. In it, an "engineer" travels to a remote Kurdish village with the intent of photographing the funeral rites of a dying 100-year-old woman, and the witty, haunting, poetic film that follows is about his struggle to complete that mission, to capture something of real life on film without violating its essence. Scott Foundas

La Commune (Peter Watkins, 2000): An enormous work of the socially conscious imagination — a century-old story (the working-class uprising in Paris, 1871) presented as though it were a live television broadcast, hosted by two reporters who become accomplices to the events they are covering, and practitioners of the art of disinformation: cable news, avant la lettre. And then Watkins steps back, finding in the 19th Century a microcosm of the 20th, from xenophobia to the looming menace of capitalism. A movie ripped from the headlines, then and now. Scott Foundas

There Will Be Blood (Paul Thomas Anderson, 2007): A 21st-century Citizen Kane, Anderson's freewheeling adaptation of Upton Sinclair's Oil was a fever dream about the American dream, charting the infernal entanglement of money, power, and religion on an arid stretch of California land at the dawn of the 20th Century. American movies rarely dream this big anymore, and with the wholesale shuttering of the studio-owned "specialty" divisions, it might be quite some time before they do again. Scott Foundas